Watch: Couple Saved 12 Days After Turkey Earthquake, Child Dies
Istanbul: A couple and their son were pulled alive from under a collapsed apartment building more than 12 days after a 7.8 magnitude earthquake ravaged parts of Turkiye and Syria, although the child later died at a hospital, Turkish state media reported Saturday. A foreign search team from Kyrgyzstan rescued Samir Muhammed Accar, 49, his wife, Ragda, 40, and their 12-year-old son while digging through the rubble of the apartment building in the southern Turkish city of Antakya, the state-run Anadolu news agency said. They were removed at about 11:30 a.M. Local time (8:30 GMT), or 296 hours after the Feb 6 quake, and quickly transferred to ambulances. TV footage showing medics fixing an IV drip to the man’s arm as he lay on a stretcher.
One of the Kyrgyz rescuers said the team also found the bodies of two dead children. Anadolu later reported they also were the children of Samir Muhammad and Ragda Accar.
New #miracle in #Turkey: #rescued 12 days after the #earthquake. #Rescue teams managed to find a couple and their son alive after spending 296 hours (more than 12 days) trapped under the ruins in #Antakya. #turkeyearthquake2023 #Turkey pic.twitter.com/Pc9G3gCXkC
— Reliable Self(@Rahulkhan41) February 18, 2023
During a visit to Antakya, the capital of Hatay province, Turkish Health Minister Fahrettin Koca said the father was conscious and being treated at Mustafa Kemal University Hospital. Anadolu published photos showing American TV personality and former US Senate candidate Mehmet Oz visiting the recovering man.
Also Read: Heartwarming Pic: Cat Refuses to Leave Turkish Man Who Rescued it From Rubble
Reporting on their conversation, Anadolu said Samir Muhammed Accar described how he survived the ordeal by drinking his own urine. He also told Dr Oz that his children responded to his voice for the first two or three days but he heard nothing from after that.
Hatay province, where Antakya is located, was one of areas hit hardest by the earthquake, which killed at least 40,642 people in Turkiye and 3,688 in Syria. Search and rescue operations are continuing in Turkiye, although the head of the country’s disaster response agency said they would end on Sunday.